After Lasky left the Army, he became a German correspondent for the
New Leader and for the
Partisan Review. In 1947, Lasky sent a message to General
Lucius D. Clay which became known as "The Melvin Lasky Proposal". In this document, Lasky argued for a more aggressive campaign of cultural and psychological operations to combat the Soviet Union in the
Cold War. Soon after, Lasky received
Marshall Plan funding to create the German-language journal
Der Monat ("The Month"), airlifted into Berlin during the 1948 Soviet
blockade. Its purpose was to support U.S. foreign policy and win over German intellectuals views that were socially progressive but anti-communist.
Der Monat continued as a prominent highbrow Germanophone journal, incorporating essays and articles from many Western European and North America intellectuals as well as dissidents from the Eastern Bloc. Contributors included
Theodor Adorno,
Hannah Arendt,
Franz Borkenau,
Thomas Mann,
Arthur Koestler,
Raymond Aron,
Ignazio Silone,
Heinrich Böll,
Hans Sahl,
Max Frisch,
T. S. Eliot,
Saul Bellow,
Milovan Djilas,
Richard Löwenthal,
Peter de Mendelssohn,
Hilde Spiel, and
Hermann Kesten. The journal also received funding from the
Ford Foundation and the CIA. According to CIA official
Ray S. Cline the journal "would not have been able to survive financially without CIA funds". Lasky helped to found the
Congress for Cultural Freedom (CCF) at a 1950 conference he organized in
West Berlin.
Frank Wisner, of the CIA's
Office of Policy Coordination, criticized Lasky for making American sponsorship of the conference too obvious. Although temporarily expelled from the CCF by Wisner, Lasky was included again in 1953 as a member of the "Tri-Magazine Editorial Committee", which established policies and topics for
Der Monat,
Preuves, and
Encounter. As part of this committee, Lasky argued that these magazines must express some dissent against the American government or risk being exposed as propaganda. Furthermore, Lasky contributed to sustaining West Berlin's role as a symbol of transatlantic solidarity.
Der Monat was sold to
Die Zeit and temporarily ceased publication in 1971. From 1978 until 1987,
Der Monat (now titled
Der Monat (Neue Folge) or simply
Der Monat (N. F.)) re-surfaced as a
Die Zeit quarterly without Lasky's involvement as editor-in-chief, but Lasky remained publisher along with his German wife Helga Hegewisch, while the journal's new editor-in-chief was
SPD politician and later German Minister of Culture
Michael Naumann. A new economy and marketing publication called
Der Monat appearing in Germany since 1997 has nothing to do with the former journal's socio-political concept and design. ==
Encounter==